Natural selection explains how organisms that already exist evolve in response to changes in their environment. But Darwin's theory is silent on how organisms came into being in the first place, which he considered a deep mystery. What creates life out of the inanimate compounds that make up living things? No one knows. How were the first organisms assembled? Nature hasn't given us the slightest hint.
If anything, the mystery has deepened over time. After all, if life began unaided under primordial conditions in a natural system containing zero knowledge, then it should be possible -- it should be easy -- to create life in a laboratory today. But determined attempts have failed. International fame, a likely Nobel Prize, and $1 million from the Gene Emergence Project await the researcher who makes life on a lab bench. Still, no one has come close.
From Wired
Recent comments
2 days 14 hours ago
2 days 17 hours ago
5 days 14 hours ago
5 days 15 hours ago
1 week 2 days ago
1 week 2 days ago
1 week 2 days ago
2 weeks 2 hours ago
2 weeks 23 hours ago
2 weeks 2 days ago